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1,000 years.
Since the Middle Ages, at least.
Since about AD1100.
The short answer is: about one thousand years. See the attached Related Link.
that would depend upon from where they came; most likely days rather than hours.
Auschwitz existed for about 4 years and 4 months.
AUSCHWITZ The Auschwitz (Auschwitz-Birkenau) death camp was the site of the most killings of European Jews during the Holocaust. In 1941, 850 ill and malnourished Jews were killed in an experimental gassing there, and after its success, the Nazis started using this method as a daily routine. An estimated three million people were killed at Auschwitz through gassing, starvation, shooting, burning, and other methods. 9 out of 10 prisoners were Jews, but there were also large numbers of Soviet and other nations' POW's, gypsies, homosexuals, and others sent there. According to sources, Adolf Hitler personally ordered the mass executions at Auschwitz while visiting there once in 1940. Children were brought to the camp as well, but usually they didn't stay long. They were often killed as soon as they arrived, and chil
In the Middle Ages, when the Jews were persecuted in Western Europe, Poland was tolerant and welcoming. In parts of Europe the Jews were slaughtered at the time of the First Crusade and later they were accused of causing the bubonic plague. From the late 1640s onwards Russia pushed its large Jewish population westwards into Poland and Lithuania.
In both cases the answer is no. However, after Italy surrendered in 1943, much of the country was occupied by the Nazis and they deported Italian Jews to Auschwitz. The Japanese, who were almost entirely unfamiliar with the long-standing "Christian" tradition of antisemitism found the Nazi attitude towards the Jews very puzzling.
Yes. They were usually made of straw tied to a stick, just like everyone else's. The straw probably didn't last very long, but they could keep the stick for a long time.
Anne Frank was at Auschwitz for approximately 7-8 weeks. According to records, she arrived at Auschwitz at the beginning of September, and was transported to Bergen-Belsen at the end of October.
Otto Frank died in 1980, so he lived for about 25 years after being liberated from Auschwitz.